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{{short description|Finnish textile designer for Marimekko}}
{{good article}}
{{Infobox person
{{Infobox person
| image = Maija Isola at work.jpg
| image = Maija Isola at work.jpg
| imagesize = 250px
| imagesize =
| caption = At work, sitting cross-legged, paintbrush and paintpot in hand
| caption = At work, sitting cross-legged, paintbrush and paintpot in hand
| birth_date = {{birth date|1927|03|15|df=y}}
| birth_date = {{birth date|1927|03|15|df=y}}
| birth_place = Arolammi,{{sfn|Shimatsuka|2012|p=18}} [[Riihimäki]], [[Finland]]
| birth_place = Arolammi,{{sfn|Shimatsuka|2012|p=18}} [[Riihimäki]], [[Finland]]
| death_place = [[Helsinki]]
| death_place = [[Riihimäki]]
| death_date = {{death date and age|2001|03|03|1927|03|15|df=y}}
| death_date = {{death date and age|2001|03|03|1927|03|15|df=y}}
| occupation = Textile designer
| occupation = Textile designer
| nationality = [[Finland|Finnish]]
| nationality = [[Finland|Finnish]]
| spouse = Georg Leander<br>Jaakko Somersalo<br>Jorma Tissari
| spouse = {{plainlist|
* Georg Leander
* Jaakko Somersalo
* Jorma Tissari
}}
| known_for = [[Unikko]] and other [[Marimekko]] patterns
| known_for = Unikko and other [[Marimekko]] patterns
}}
}}


'''Maija Isola''' (15 March 1927 – 3 March 2001) was a [[Finland|Finnish]] designer of printed [[textile]]s, creating over 500 patterns including ''Unikko'' ("Poppy"). Her bold colourful designs made the home furnishings and fashion company [[Marimekko]] famous in the 1960s. She also had a career as a visual artist.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.marimekko.fi/ENG/design/designers/maijaisola/ |title=Maija Isola |publisher=Marimekko |accessdate=5 March 2010 |deadurl=yes |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20100316162155/http://www.marimekko.fi/ENG/design/designers/maijaisola |archivedate=16 March 2010 |df= }}</ref>
'''Maija Sofia Isola''' (15 March 1927 – 3 March 2001) was a [[Finland|Finnish]] designer of printed [[textile]]s, and the creator of over 500 patterns, including ''Unikko'' ("[[Poppy]]"). The bold, colourful prints she created as the head designer of [[Marimekko]] made the Finnish company famous in the 1960s. She also had a successful career as a visual artist.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.marimekko.fi/ENG/design/designers/maijaisola/ |title=Maija Isola |publisher=Marimekko |access-date=5 March 2010 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20100316162155/http://www.marimekko.fi/ENG/design/designers/maijaisola |archive-date=16 March 2010 }}</ref>


{{cquote|Undisputedly the most famous textile designer .. at Marimekko<ref name="FinnStyle">{{cite web | url=http://www.finnstyle.com/marimekko-maija-isola.html | title=FinnStyle:Maija Isola | publisher=FinnStyle | work=Finnish Designers: Maija Isola | accessdate=October 18, 2011}}</ref>}}
{{cquote|Undisputedly the most famous textile designer... at Marimekko<ref name="FinnStyle">{{cite web | url=http://www.finnstyle.com/marimekko-maija-isola.html | title=FinnStyle:Maija Isola | publisher=FinnStyle | work=Finnish Designers: Maija Isola | access-date=October 18, 2011}}</ref>}}


Isola exhibited across Europe including at the World Exhibition Brussels and the Milan ''[[Triennale]]'', and in the USA. [[Retrospective]]s of her work have been held at the Design Museum in Helsinki, the [[Victoria and Albert Museum]], London, the [[Danish Museum of Art & Design|Design Museum, Copenhagen]], the [[National Museum of Slovenia|Slovene Ethnographic Museum]], Ljubljana, and the [[Minneapolis Institute of Arts]]. Her prints continue to sell at Marimekko.
Isola exhibited across Europe, including at the [[Expo 58|Brussels World Fair]] and the Milan ''[[Triennale]]'', and in the USA. [[Retrospective]]s of her work have been held at the Design Museum in Helsinki, the [[Victoria and Albert Museum]], London, the [[Danish Museum of Art & Design|Design Museum, Copenhagen]], the [[National Museum of Slovenia|Slovene Ethnographic Museum]], Ljubljana, and the [[Minneapolis Institute of Arts]]. Products featuring her prints are still being sold at Marimekko.


She lived and worked for most of her life in Finland, but spent some years in France, Algeria and the United States. She was married three times. Her daughter Kristina Isola in turn became a Marimekko designer, for a time collaborating with Maija. Her granddaughter Emma also designs for the company.
She lived and worked in Finland for most of her life in, but spent some years in France, Algeria and the United States. She was married three times. Her daughter, Kristina Isola, also became a Marimekko designer, collaborating with her mother for some time. Her granddaughter, Emma, also designs for the company.


==Biography==
==Biography==
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===Early life===
===Early life===


Isola was the youngest of three daughters of Mauno and Toini Isola. Mauno was a farmer who wrote song lyrics including a popular Finnish [[Christmas carol]].{{sfn|Shimatsuka|2012|p=18}} The girls lived on the family farm and helped out with agricultural work in the summer. They made paper dolls with elegant dresses for their homemade paper dollshouse, which had elaborately decorated interiors.{{sfn|Shimatsuka|2012|pp=20–22}}
Isola was born to Mauno and Toini Isola, the youngest of their three daughters. Mauno was a farmer who wrote song lyrics, including a popular Finnish [[Christmas carol]].{{sfn|Shimatsuka|2012|p=18}} The girls lived on the family farm and helped out with agricultural work in the summer. They made paper dolls with elegant dresses for their homemade paper dollhouse, which had elaborately decorated interiors.{{sfn|Shimatsuka|2012|pp=20–22}}


Isola studied painting at the [[Helsinki]] Central School of Industrial Arts.{{sfn|Aav|2003|p=150}} In 1945, as the Second World War (with fighting between Finland and its neighbour, Russia) came to an end, her life radically changed: her father died, and she became pregnant. On 22 July 1945 she married the commercial artist Georg Leander: their daughter Kristina was born in January 1946.{{sfn|Shimatsuka|2012|p=25}}
Isola studied painting at the [[Helsinki]] Central School of Industrial Arts.{{sfn|Aav|2003|p=150}} In 1945, as the Second World War came to an end, her life changed radically: her father died, and she became pregnant. On 22 July 1945 she married the commercial artist Georg Leander; their daughter Kristina was born in January 1946.{{sfn|Shimatsuka|2012|p=25}}


In 1948, she went to Oslo, visiting the [[Van Gogh]] exhibition and seeing the [[Edvard Munch]] paintings there. She was inspired by a display of [[classical era]] pots at the Oslo Museum of Craft and Design to create her ''Amfora'' ("[[Amphora]]") print.{{sfn|Shimatsuka|2012|p=25}} The marriage with Leander did not last long, and by 1949 she was travelling Europe with the painter Jaakko ("Jaska") Somersalo, who became her second husband. He taught her the technique of [[woodcut]] printing and inspired her to paint. They divorced in 1955.{{sfn|Shimatsuka|2012|p=29}}
In 1948, she went to Oslo, visiting the [[Van Gogh]] exhibition and seeing the [[Edvard Munch]] paintings there. She was inspired by a display of [[classical era]] pots at the Oslo Museum of Craft and Design to create her ''Amfora'' ("[[Amphora]]") print.{{sfn|Shimatsuka|2012|p=25}} The marriage with Leander did not last long, and by 1949 she was travelling Europe with the painter Jaakko ("Jaska") Somersalo, who became her second husband. He taught her [[woodcut]] printing and inspired her to paint. They divorced in 1955.{{sfn|Shimatsuka|2012|p=29}}


===Marimekko===
===Marimekko===
[[File:Marimekko Unikko.jpg|thumb|Marimekko dishes featuring Isola's 1964 ''Unikko'' poppy pattern.]]
Her student-era work, including ''Amfora'', was spotted in 1949 by Marimekko's founder, [[Armi Ratia]]. {{sfn|Aav|2003|p=150}}{{sfn|Shimatsuka|2012|p=25}} Ratia hired Isola to work for Printex, the forerunner of Marimekko.<ref name="FinnishDesign">{{cite web |title=Maija Isola |url=http://finnishdesign.com/maija-isola/ |publisher=Finnish Desigh |access-date=24 April 2017}}</ref> She became the principal textile designer for Marimekko,<ref>{{cite web |url=http://designfinland.blogs.com/designfinland/2006/08/maija_isola_pat.html |title=Maija Isola patterns for Marimekko |date=31 August 2006 |publisher=Design Finland |access-date=5 March 2010}}</ref> creating some eight to ten patterns every year.{{sfn|Aav|2003|p=150}}<ref>{{cite encyclopedia |last=Byars |first=Mel |title=Isola, Maija (1927–2001) |encyclopedia=The design encyclopedia |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=-Q1IAQAAIAAJ |year=2004 |publisher=Laurence King|isbn=9781856693493 }}</ref>


Between 1957 and 1963, Isola created her first series of works on a single theme, ''Luonto'' (Nature). It consisted of some 30 designs, based on pressed plants, which her daughter Kristina had started collecting at age 11.{{sfn|Shimatsuka|2012|p=31}} In 1958, she began another series, ''Ornamentti'' (Ornament), based on Slavic folk art. It, too, included about 30 designs, and made her famous.{{sfn|Shimatsuka|2012|p=46}}
While still a student, she was noticed in 1949 by Marimekko's founder, [[Armi Ratia]], for works including ''Amfora''.{{sfn|Aav|2003|p=150}}{{sfn|Shimatsuka|2012|p=25}} Ratia hired Isola to work for Printex, the forerunner of [[Marimekko]].<ref name="FinnishDesign">{{cite web |title=Maija Isola |url=http://finnishdesign.com/maija-isola/ |publisher=Finnish Desigh |accessdate=24 April 2017}}</ref> She became principal textile designer for Marimekko,<ref>{{cite web |url=http://designfinland.blogs.com/designfinland/2006/08/maija_isola_pat.html |title=Maija Isola patterns for Marimekko |date=31 August 2006 |publisher=Design Finland |accessdate=5 March 2010}}</ref> creating some eight to ten patterns each year.{{sfn|Aav|2003|p=150}}<ref>{{cite encyclopedia |last=Byars |first=Mel |title="Isola, Maija (1927–2001)" |work=The design encyclopedia |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=-Q1IAQAAIAAJ |year=2004 |publisher=Laurence King}}</ref>

Between 1957 and 1963 she made her first series of works on a single theme, ''Luonto'' (Nature). It consisted of some 30 designs based on plants pressed by her daughter Kristina, starting at age 11.{{sfn|Shimatsuka|2012|p=31}} In 1958, she started another series, ''Ornamentti'' (Ornament), based on Slavic folk art. It too included about 30 designs, and made her famous.{{sfn|Shimatsuka|2012|p=46}}


In 1959 she married the judge Jorma Tissari. He was a wealthy art-lover with a spacious home in the centre of [[Helsinki]]. When Isola wanted more creative freedom from Ratia's control, he negotiated a new contract with Marimekko for her, allowing her to work in her own way.{{sfn|Shimatsuka|2012|p=54}}
In 1959 she married the judge Jorma Tissari. He was a wealthy art lover with a spacious home in the centre of [[Helsinki]]. When Isola wanted more creative freedom from Ratia's control, Tissari negotiated with Marimekko to give her a new contract that allowed her more creative freedom.{{sfn|Shimatsuka|2012|p=54}}


[[File:Maija_Isola_Pattern_Book_LoveLoveLove_1968.jpg|thumb|upright|left|Page from Isola's "Pattern Books", showing the hand-drawn construction of her 1968 textile pattern ''Lovelovelove'' and her handwritten annotations. The pattern books continued to serve as production manuals after her death.{{sfn|Shimatsuka|2012|p=89}}]]
[[File:Maija_Isola_Pattern_Book_LoveLoveLove_1968.jpg|thumb|left|Page from Isola's "Pattern Books", showing the hand-drawn construction of her 1968 textile pattern ''Lovelovelove'' and her handwritten annotations. The pattern books continued to serve as production manuals after her death.{{sfn|Shimatsuka|2012|p=89}}]]


The collaboration between Isola and Ratia was an "unusual creative power game" characterised by "vitality and inventiveness"{{sfn|Aav|2003|p=151}} rather than a harmonious understanding.{{sfn|Aav|2003|p=151}} The tone for this was set when, in 1964, Isola "provocatively"{{sfn|Aav|2003|p=151}} defied Ratia's statement that she hated floral patterns,{{sfn|Aav|2003|p=151}} setting the style of the company by painting the famous ''Unikko'' ([[Poppy]]) pattern in bold pink, red and black on white;<ref name="Timeline">{{cite web|url=http://www.marimekko.com/who-we-are/timeline |title=Marimekko Timeline |publisher=Marimekko.com |work=Timeline |accessdate=18 October 2011 |deadurl=yes |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20111027094510/http://www.marimekko.com/who-we-are/timeline |archivedate=27 October 2011 |df= }}</ref> the pattern has been in production ever since.<ref name="RRUnikko">{{cite web | url=http://retrorenovation.com/2010/10/17/marimekko-unikko-by-maija-isola-1964/ | title=RetroRenovation: Marimekko Unikko | publisher=Retro Renovation | work=Marimekko Unikko by Maija Isola, 1964 | date=17 October 2010 | accessdate=18 October 2011 | author=Kueber, Pam}}</ref> It was one of some eight floral designs that Ratia chose from Isola's portfolio in that period.{{sfn|Shimatsuka|2012|p=64}}
The collaboration between Isola and Ratia was an "unusual creative power game" characterised by "vitality and inventiveness"{{sfn|Aav|2003|p=151}} rather than a harmonious understanding.{{sfn|Aav|2003|p=151}} The tone for this was set when, in 1964, Isola "provocatively"{{sfn|Aav|2003|p=151}} defied Ratia's professed hatred of floral patterns {{sfn|Aav|2003|p=151}} by painting the famous ''Unikko'' ([[Poppy]]) pattern in bold pink, red and black on white;<ref name="Timeline">{{cite web|url=http://www.marimekko.com/who-we-are/timeline |title=Marimekko Timeline |publisher=Marimekko.com |work=Timeline |access-date=18 October 2011 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20111027094510/http://www.marimekko.com/who-we-are/timeline |archive-date=27 October 2011 }}</ref> the pattern came to define the brand and has been in production ever since.<ref name="RRUnikko">{{cite web | url=http://retrorenovation.com/2010/10/17/marimekko-unikko-by-maija-isola-1964/ | title=RetroRenovation: Marimekko Unikko | publisher=Retro Renovation | work=Marimekko Unikko by Maija Isola, 1964 | date=17 October 2010 | access-date=18 October 2011 | author=Kueber, Pam}}</ref> It was one of some eight floral designs that Ratia chose from Isola's portfolio in that period.{{sfn|Shimatsuka|2012|p=64}}


From 1965 to 1967, Isola worked on the theme of sun and sea, creating at least nine designs used by Marimekko including ''Albatrossi'' (Albatross), ''Meduusa'' (Jellyfish), and ''Osteri'' (Oyster).{{sfn|Shimatsuka|2012|p=72}} Her patterns were by now being widely reproduced. To facilitate this process and to keep the patterns accurate, Isola maintained a set of "pattern books". These were handwritten exercise books containing precise details of her [[pattern repeat]]s. Each one, such as her 1968 ''Lovelovelove'', was drawn to scale on a pattern book page, coloured, and annotated with the names of the colours to be used. The books also recorded the size of the actual repeat and details of print orders. The books continued to be used as production guides in the decades after her death.{{sfn|Shimatsuka|2012|p=89}}
From 1965 to 1967, Isola worked on the theme of sun and sea, creating at least nine designs that were adopted by Marimekko, including ''Albatrossi'' (Albatross), ''Meduusa'' (Jellyfish), and ''Osteri'' (Oyster).{{sfn|Shimatsuka|2012|p=72}} Her patterns were, by now, being widely reproduced. To facilitate this process and to keep the patterns accurate, Isola maintained a set of "pattern books". These were handwritten exercise books containing precise details of her [[pattern repeat]]s. Each one, such as her 1968 ''Lovelovelove'', was drawn to scale on a pattern book page, coloured, and annotated with the names of the colours to be used. The books also recorded the size of the actual repeat and details of print orders. The books continued to be used as production guides in the decades after her death.{{sfn|Shimatsuka|2012|p=89}}


In 1970 she travelled on her own to Paris to get away from her marriage and family commitments. There she had a love affair with the Egyptian scholar Ahmed Al-Haggagi. He encouraged her to work on Arab patterns, sketching for her the basis of her ''Poppy'' (not the same as ''Unikko''). Her Arab-inspired patterns of this period include ''Kungatar'', ''Naamio'', ''Sadunkertoja'', ''Tumma'', and ''Välly''.{{sfn|Shimatsuka|2012|p=102}} In 1971 she separated from Tissari, realizing that she preferred to live alone.{{sfn|Shimatsuka|2012|p=87}} She spent three years in Algeria, taking a lover named Muhamed.{{sfn|Shimatsuka|2012|p=107}}
In 1970 she travelled on her own to Paris to get away from her marriage and family commitments. There, she had a love affair with the Egyptian scholar Ahmed Al-Haggagi. He encouraged her to work on Arabian patterns, sketching for her the basis of her ''Poppy'' (not the same as ''Unikko''). Her Arabian-inspired patterns of this period include ''Kuningatar'', ''Naamio'', ''Sadunkertoja'', ''Tumma'', and ''Välly''.{{sfn|Shimatsuka|2012|p=102}} In 1971, she separated from Tissari, realising that she preferred to live alone.{{sfn|Shimatsuka|2012|p=87}} She spent three years in Algeria, taking a lover named Muhamed.{{sfn|Shimatsuka|2012|p=107}}


[[File:Marimekko-Iittala Kivituikut Primavera-liinalla.jpg|thumb|[[Tablecloth]] in Isola's 1974 ''Primavera'' pattern (with candleholders designed by Heikki Orvola)]]
[[File:Marimekko-Iittala Kivituikut Primavera-liinalla.jpg|thumb|[[Tablecloth]] in Isola's 1974 ''Primavera'' pattern (with candleholders designed by [[Heikki Orvola]])]]


In 1974, Isola designed the popular pattern ''Primavera'', consisting of stylized [[Tagetes|Marigold]] flowers; this has since been printed in many different colours for tablecloths, plates and other items.<ref name="Primavera">{{cite web | url=http://kvav4130.wikispaces.com/Primavera | title=Primavera | work=Primavera | accessdate=18 October 2011}}</ref> In 1976 she returned to Paris, working with Al-Haggagi on a series of Egypt-inspired prints including ''Niili'' (Nile), ''Nubia'', and ''Papyrus''.{{sfn|Shimatsuka|2012|p=114}} The next year she accompanied Al-Haggagi to [[Boone, North Carolina]] where he was a lecturer. She spent the year painting, walking, and doing [[yoga]], inspired by the scenery of the [[Appalachian Mountains]], which she said reminded her of her home town, Riihimäki. She made some designs but found it hard to sell any in the American market, as there were few factories that could print fabrics to her specifications.{{sfn|Shimatsuka|2012|p=136}}
In 1974, Isola designed the popular pattern ''Primavera'', consisting of stylized [[Tagetes|Marigold]] flowers; this has since been printed in many different colours for tablecloths, plates and other items.<ref name="Primavera">{{cite web | url=http://kvav4130.wikispaces.com/Primavera | title=Primavera | access-date=18 October 2011 | archive-date=9 August 2015 | archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20150809020639/http://kvav4130.wikispaces.com/Primavera | url-status=dead }}</ref> In 1976 she returned to Paris, working with Al-Haggagi on a series of Egyptian-inspired prints including ''Niili'' (Nile), ''Nubia'', and ''Papyrus''.{{sfn|Shimatsuka|2012|p=114}} The next year, she accompanied Al-Haggagi to [[Boone, North Carolina]] where he was a lecturer. She spent the year painting, walking, and doing [[yoga]], inspired by the scenery of the [[Appalachian Mountains]], which she said reminded her of her home town, Riihimäki. She made some designs, but found it hard to sell any in the American market, as there were few factories that could print fabrics to her specifications.{{sfn|Shimatsuka|2012|p=136}}


On returning to Finland, 160 of her works, including paintings and sketches but not her print designs, were displayed in a retrospective exhibition in a Helsinki gallery in 1979.{{sfn|Shimatsuka|2012|p=140}}
On returning to Finland, 160 of her works, including paintings and sketches but not her print designs, were displayed at a retrospective exhibition in a Helsinki gallery in 1979.{{sfn|Shimatsuka|2012|p=140}}


From 1980 to 1987 Isola designed patterns for Marimekko jointly (both names appearing on the edge of each print{{sfn|Shimatsuka|2012|p=140}}) with her daughter, Kristina; they worked in their own studios, in the winter in Helsinki, in the summer in Kaunismäki.{{sfn|Shimatsuka|2012|p=146}} Kristina became one of Marimekko's chief designers;{{sfn|Jackson|2007|p=200}}<ref name=NYTimes /> she had joined Marimekko when she was 18.<ref name=FinnStyleKristina>{{cite web |title=Maija & Kristina Isola |url=http://www.finnstyle.com/marimekko-maija-kristina-isola.html |publisher=FinnStyle |accessdate=27 November 2015}}</ref> During her 40-year career with Marimekko, Maija Isola created a "staggering"<ref name=Perimeter>{{cite web |title=Maija Isola: art, fabric, Marimekko |url=http://perimeterbooks.com/Maija-Isola-art-fabric-marimekko |publisher=Perimeter Books |accessdate=27 November 2015}}</ref> 500 prints for the company.<ref name=Perimeter/> Among the best-known are ''Kivet'' (Stones) and ''Kaivo'' (Well); they continue to sell in the 21st century.<ref>{{cite web |title=Maija Isola |url=http://www.marimekko.com/who-we-are/designers/maija-isola |publisher=[[Marimekko]] |accessdate=24 April 2017 |deadurl=yes |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20120424031619/http://www.marimekko.com/who-we-are/designers/maija-isola |archivedate=24 April 2012 |df= }}</ref><ref>{{cite book |last=Suhonen |first=Pekko |title=Phenomenon Marimekko |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=q-VEAAAAYAAJ |year=1986 |publisher=Marimekko Oy |page=35}}</ref>
From 1980 to 1987, Isola designed patterns for Marimekko jointly {{sfn|Shimatsuka|2012|p=140}} with her daughter, Kristina. They worked in their own studios, in Helsinki in the winter, in Kaunismäki in the summer.{{sfn|Shimatsuka|2012|p=146}} Kristina became one of Marimekko's chief designers;{{sfn|Jackson|2007|p=200}}<ref name=NYTimes /> she had joined Marimekko when she was 18.<ref name=FinnStyleKristina>{{cite web |title=Maija & Kristina Isola |url=http://www.finnstyle.com/marimekko-maija-kristina-isola.html |publisher=FinnStyle |access-date=27 November 2015}}</ref> During her 40-year career with Marimekko, Maija Isola created a "staggering"<ref name=Perimeter>{{cite web |title=Maija Isola: art, fabric, Marimekko |url=http://perimeterbooks.com/Maija-Isola-art-fabric-marimekko |publisher=Perimeter Books |access-date=27 November 2015 |archive-date=8 December 2015 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20151208163843/http://perimeterbooks.com/Maija-Isola-art-fabric-marimekko |url-status=dead }}</ref> 500 prints for the company.<ref name=Perimeter/> Among the best-known are ''Kivet'' (Stones) and ''Kaivo'' (Well); they continue to sell in the 21st century.<ref>{{cite web |title=Maija Isola |url=http://www.marimekko.com/who-we-are/designers/maija-isola |publisher=[[Marimekko]] |access-date=24 April 2017 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120424031619/http://www.marimekko.com/who-we-are/designers/maija-isola |archive-date=24 April 2012 }}</ref><ref>{{cite book |last=Suhonen |first=Pekko |title=Phenomenon Marimekko |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=q-VEAAAAYAAJ |year=1986 |publisher=Marimekko Oy |page=35|isbn=9789513538682 }}</ref>


===Retirement===
===Retirement===


From 1987, when she retired, Isola worked on painting rather than textiles, until her death on 3 March 2001.<ref name=NYTimes/> Her designs, and Marimekko, went into eclipse. In 1991, the new head of Marimekko, Kirsti Paakkanen successfully relaunched Isola's ''Fandango'',{{sfn|Shimatsuka|2012|p=148}} but it was not until the late 1990s that Marimekko again became widely popular. Its renewed fortunes were based on "classic" Isola patterns from the 1950s and 1960s.{{sfn|Shimatsuka|2012|p=150}}
From 1987, when she retired, Isola worked on painting rather than textiles, until her death on 3 March 2001.<ref name=NYTimes/> Her designs, and Marimekko, went into eclipse. In 1991, the new head of Marimekko, [[Kirsti Paakkanen]] successfully relaunched Isola's ''Fandango'',{{sfn|Shimatsuka|2012|p=148}} but it was not until the late 1990s that Marimekko again became widely popular. Its renewed fortunes were based on "classic" Isola patterns from the 1950s and 1960s.{{sfn|Shimatsuka|2012|p=150}}


==Reception==
==Reception==
[[File:11-07-29-helsinki-by-RalfR-054.jpg|thumb|400px|The glowing colours and bold patterns in [[Marimekko]] owe much to Maija Isola's design and example. A roll of ''Unikko'' is second from the bottom of the fabric stand; a vertical roll of the black-and-white ''Joonas'' (Jonah) stands at the far left.]]
[[File:11-07-29-helsinki-by-RalfR-054.jpg|thumb|left|upright=1.35|The glowing colours and bold patterns in [[Marimekko]] owe much to Maija Isola's design and example. A roll of ''Unikko'' is second from the bottom of the fabric stand; a vertical roll of the black-and-white ''Joonas'' (Jonah) stands at the far left.]]


According to FinnStyle, Isola was "undisputedly the most famous textile designer to have existed at Marimekko",<ref name="FinnStyle"/> and she "created over 500 prints during her long and colorful employment."<ref name=FinnStyle /> Her work enabled the company to become a world-leading international fashion trendsetter.{{sfn|Aav|2003|p=150}}
According to FinnStyle, Isola was "undisputedly the most famous textile designer to have existed at Marimekko",<ref name="FinnStyle"/> and she "created over 500 prints during her long and colorful employment."<ref name=FinnStyle /> Her work enabled the company to become a world-leading international fashion trendsetter.{{sfn|Aav|2003|p=150}}


Ivar Ekman, writing in the [[New York Times]], quotes Marianne Aav, director of the [[Helsinki]] Design Museum: "What we understand as the Marimekko style is very much based on what Maija Isola was doing".<ref name="NYTimes">{{cite web | url=https://www.nytimes.com/2005/08/22/style/22iht-fmarim.html?scp=2&sq=Maija%20Isola&st=cse | title=New York Times | publisher=[[New York Times]] | work=Nostalgia for a modern Finnish designer | date=23 August 2005 | accessdate=October 18, 2011 | author=Ekman, Ivar}}</ref> Ekman comments "The range of prints that Isola produced for Marimekko is astounding", as the patterns span "minimalistic geometric", "toned-down naturalistic" and "explosion of colors".<ref name=NYTimes />
Ivar Ekman, writing in the [[New York Times]], quotes Marianne Aav, director of the [[Helsinki]] Design Museum: "What we understand as the Marimekko style is very much based on what Maija Isola was doing".<ref name="NYTimes">{{cite web | url=https://www.nytimes.com/2005/08/22/style/22iht-fmarim.html?scp=2&sq=Maija%20Isola&st=cse | title=New York Times | publisher=[[New York Times]] | work=Nostalgia for a modern Finnish designer | date=23 August 2005 | access-date=October 18, 2011 | author=Ekman, Ivar}}</ref> Ekman comments "The range of prints that Isola produced for Marimekko is astounding", as the patterns span "minimalist geometric", "toned-down naturalistic" and "explosion of colors".<ref name=NYTimes />


[[Marion Hume]], writing in [[Time Magazine]], explains that Isola "was able to mastermind an astonishing range, from the intricate and folkloric Ananas (1962)—which remains one of the most popular prints for the home market—to the radically simple, dramatically enlarged, asymmetrical ''Unikko'' poppy (1964), originally in red and in blue, which may be one of the most widely recognized prints on earth."<ref name=TimeMagazine>{{cite web | url=http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,1729405,00.html | title=Time Magazine | publisher=[[Time Magazine]] | work=Luxury Source | date=April 9, 2008 | accessdate=23 October 2011 | author=Hume, Marion}}</ref>
[[Marion Hume]], writing in [[Time Magazine]], explains that Isola "was able to mastermind an astonishing range, from the intricate and folkloric Ananas (1962)--which remains one of the most popular prints for the home market--to the radically simple, dramatically enlarged, asymmetrical ''Unikko'' poppy (1964), originally in red and in blue, which may be one of the most widely recognized prints on earth."<ref name=TimeMagazine>{{cite web | url=http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,1729405,00.html | archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080417015927/http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,1729405,00.html | url-status=dead | archive-date=April 17, 2008 | title=Time Magazine | publisher=[[Time Magazine]] | work=Luxury Source | date=April 9, 2008 | access-date=23 October 2011 | author=Hume, Marion}}</ref>


According to [[Tamsin Blanchard]], writing in [[The Observer]], "The designs of Maija Isola – one of the company's [most] original and longest-standing designers - have stood the test of time."<ref name="Observer">{{cite web | url=https://www.theguardian.com/theobserver/2001/may/20/features.magazine7?INTCMP=SRCH | title=The Observer | publisher=[[The Guardian]] | work=Interiors:Marimekko:The Finnish Line | date=20 May 2001 | accessdate=18 October 2011 | author=Blanchard, Tamsin}}</ref> Blanchard describes as "timeless" Isola's 1972 Wind design "with its feathery organic tree skeletons in silhouette", her 1957 ''Putinotko'' "spiky black-and-white print", her 1963 Melon and her 1956 Stones.<ref name=Observer />
According to [[Tamsin Blanchard]], writing in [[The Observer]], "The designs of Maija Isola – one of the company's [most] original and longest-standing designers - have stood the test of time."<ref name="Observer">{{cite web | url=https://www.theguardian.com/theobserver/2001/may/20/features.magazine7?INTCMP=SRCH | title=The Observer | publisher=[[The Guardian]] | work=Interiors:Marimekko:The Finnish Line | date=20 May 2001 | access-date=18 October 2011 | author=Blanchard, Tamsin}}</ref> Blanchard describes Isola's 1972 Wind design "with its feathery organic tree skeletons in silhouette" as "timeless", her 1957 ''Putinotko'' as a "spiky black-and-white print", also discussing her 1963 work, Melon, and her 1956 work, Stones.<ref name=Observer />


Hannah Booth, writing in [[The Guardian]], explains that Marimekko's founder, Armi Ratia, "recruited Maija Isola, the first and most important of many young female designers, to create original prints".<ref name=Guardian>{{cite web | url=https://www.theguardian.com/lifeandstyle/2005/sep/05/shopping.fashion?INTCMP=SRCH | title=The Guardian: Life & Style: Women | publisher=[[The Guardian]] | work=Flower power | date=5 September 2005 | accessdate=18 October 2011 | author=Booth, Hannah}}</ref> She describes Isola as unconventional, leaving her daughter Kristina "to grow up with her grandmother so she could travel the world to find inspiration for her textiles".<ref name="Guardian" /> Booth quotes Finnish novelist Kaari Utrio as saying Isola was "a dangerously original character"; she "belonged to a trailblazing generation" which enabled young women to move freely into the arts.<ref name=Guardian/>
Hannah Booth, writing in [[The Guardian]], explains that Marimekko's founder, Armi Ratia, "recruited Maija Isola, the first and most important of many young female designers, to create original prints".<ref name=Guardian>{{cite web | url=https://www.theguardian.com/lifeandstyle/2005/sep/05/shopping.fashion?INTCMP=SRCH | title=The Guardian: Life & Style: Women | publisher=[[The Guardian]] | work=Flower power | date=5 September 2005 | access-date=18 October 2011 | author=Booth, Hannah}}</ref> She describes Isola as unconventional, leaving her daughter Kristina "to grow up with her grandmother so she could travel the world to find inspiration for her textiles".<ref name="Guardian" /> Booth quotes Finnish novelist Kaari Utrio as saying Isola was "a dangerously original character"; she "belonged to a trailblazing generation" which enabled young women to move freely into the arts.<ref name=Guardian/>


[[Lesley Jackson]], in a chapter titled ''Op, Pop, and [[Psychedelia]]'', writes that "from Finland the exuberant all-conquering Marimekko burst on to the international scene" in the 1960s; she illustrates this with one pattern by [[Vuokko Nurmesniemi]], and three by Isola – ''Lokki'', ''Melooni'', and inevitably ''Unikko''.{{sfn|Jackson|2007|pp=136–137}}{{efn|Among the best-known of the roughly 500 patterns that Isola designed, other than those already mentioned, are Primavera (Spring), Seireeni, Joonas, Tulipunainen (Tulips), Verso, Viitta, Hevosvaras, Bambu (Bamboo), Appelsiini (Oranges), Tuuli, Niili, Pariisin portit, Pepe, Tantsu, Satula, and Vaarallinen Planeetta.}}
[[Lesley Jackson]], in a chapter titled ''Op, Pop, and [[Psychedelia]]'', writes that "from Finland the exuberant all-conquering Marimekko burst on to the international scene" in the 1960s; she illustrates this with one pattern by [[Vuokko Nurmesniemi]], and three by Isola – ''Lokki'', ''Melooni'', and ''Unikko''.{{sfn|Jackson|2007|pp=136–137}}{{efn|Among the best-known of the roughly 500 patterns that Isola designed, other than those already mentioned, are Primavera (Spring), Seireeni, Joonas, Tulipunainen (Tulips), Verso, Viitta, Hevosvaras, Bambu (Bamboo), Appelsiini (Oranges), Tuuli, Niili, Pariisin portit, Pepe, Tantsu, Satula, and Vaarallinen Planeetta.}} Of ''Lokki'', Jackson writes "Isola revolutionized design with her simple, bold, flat patterns, printed on a dramatic scale. The design, whose title means 'seagull', evokes the lapping of waves and the flapping of birds' wings."{{sfn|Jackson|2007|p=136}}
Of ''Lokki'', Jackson writes "Isola revolutionized design with her simple, bold, flat patterns, printed on a dramatic scale. The design, whose title means 'seagull', evokes the lapping of waves and the flapping of birds' wings."{{sfn|Jackson|2007|p=136}}
Of the famous ''Unikko'', Jackson says "This huge, exploded poppy pattern embodies the unbridled design confidence of the mid-1960s, and presages the ebullience and sizzling colours of the [[flower power]] era."{{sfn|Jackson|2007|p=136}}
Of the famous ''Unikko'', Jackson explains "This huge, exploded poppy pattern embodies the unbridled design confidence of the mid-1960s, and presages the ebullience and sizzling colours of the [[flower power]] era."{{sfn|Jackson|2007|p=136}}


Hanna-Liisa Ylipoti notes that "The themes of many Marimekko designs are also very Finnish, portraying Finnish nature. For example, Maija Isola created her ''Luonto'' (Nature) design [series] using actual plant specimens".''<ref name="Ylipoti">{{cite web | url=http://www.uta.fi/FAST/FIN/CULT/yli-mari.html | title=Research | publisher=FAST-FIN-1 (TRENAK1) Finnish Institutions Research Paper | work=Marimekko's Path to Success During the 1950s and 60s | date=3 February 2011 | accessdate=23 October 2011 | author=Ylipoti, Hanna-Liisa | deadurl=yes | archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20120402005828/http://www.uta.fi/FAST/FIN/CULT/yli-mari.html | archivedate=2 April 2012 | df= }}</ref>
Hanna-Liisa Ylipoti notes that "The themes of many Marimekko designs are also very Finnish, portraying Finnish nature. For example, Maija Isola created her ''Luonto'' (Nature) design [series] using actual plant specimens".''<ref name="Ylipoti">{{cite web | url=http://www.uta.fi/FAST/FIN/CULT/yli-mari.html | title=Research | publisher=FAST-FIN-1 (TRENAK1) Finnish Institutions Research Paper | work=Marimekko's Path to Success During the 1950s and 60s | date=3 February 2011 | access-date=23 October 2011 | author=Ylipoti, Hanna-Liisa | url-status=dead | archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120402005828/http://www.uta.fi/FAST/FIN/CULT/yli-mari.html | archive-date=2 April 2012 }}</ref>


==Legacy==
==Legacy==
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Aav noted that "As the twenty-first century gets underway, Marimekko is experiencing a resurgence of interest and appreciation—a true revival. Maija Isola's ''Unikko'' pattern, designed almost forty years ago, blooms as never before."{{sfn|Aav|2003|p=149}}
Aav noted that "As the twenty-first century gets underway, Marimekko is experiencing a resurgence of interest and appreciation—a true revival. Maija Isola's ''Unikko'' pattern, designed almost forty years ago, blooms as never before."{{sfn|Aav|2003|p=149}}


In 2011, Marimekko flew a hot-air balloon decorated with an enormous version of ''Unikko'' over Helsinki, showing that the pattern remains [[iconic]] nearly half a century later.<ref name="Unikko Balloon">{{cite web | url=https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Vfo6pzfKtkk | title=Unikko hot-air balloon | publisher=Marimekko | work=Marimekko Unikko hot-air balloon flying above the silhouette of Helsinki | date=22 June 2011 | accessdate=October 18, 2011}}</ref> Marimekko's marketing policy is to reissue ''"classics from its fifty-year back catalogue, notably a large group of patterns from the 1950s and 1960s by Maija Isola."''{{sfn|Jackson|2007|p=200}}
In 2011, Marimekko flew a hot-air balloon decorated with an enormous version of ''Unikko'' over Helsinki, reflecting the [[Cultural icon|iconic]] status of the print, nearly half a century later.<ref name="Unikko Balloon">{{cite web | url=https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Vfo6pzfKtkk | title=Unikko hot-air balloon | publisher=Marimekko | work=Marimekko Unikko hot-air balloon flying above the silhouette of Helsinki | date=22 June 2011 | access-date=October 18, 2011}}{{cbignore}}{{Dead Youtube links|date=February 2022}}</ref> Marimekko's marketing policy is to reissue ''"classics from its fifty-year back catalogue, notably a large group of patterns from the 1950s and 1960s by Maija Isola."''{{sfn|Jackson|2007|p=200}}


Since 2012, Finland's airline [[Finnair]] has been flying an [[Airbus A340-300]] to its Asia destinations sporting a blue Unikko print, while an Airbus A330 painted in an Anniversary Unikko has been serving its intercontinental routes.<ref name="Finnair">{{cite web |title=Finnair and Marimekko’s design collaboration|url=https://www.finnair.com/gb/gb/marimekko |publisher=[[Finnair]] |accessdate=24 April 2017}}</ref>
Since 2012, Finland's airline [[Finnair]] has been flying an [[Airbus A340-300]] to its Asia destinations sporting a blue Unikko print, while an Airbus A330 painted in an Anniversary Unikko has been serving its other intercontinental routes.<ref name="Finnair">{{cite web |title=Finnair and Marimekko's design collaboration |url=https://www.finnair.com/gb/gb/marimekko |publisher=[[Finnair]] |access-date=24 April 2017}}</ref>


Isola was described in 2013 as a style icon.<ref>{{cite web |last1=Azzarito|first1=Amy |title=Style Icon: Maija Isola |url=http://www.designsponge.com/2013/11/style-icon-maija-isola.html |publisher=Design Sponge |accessdate=27 November 2015 |date=15 November 2013}}</ref> Her granddaughter Emma Isola works for Marimekko as a designer, forming a three-generation tradition.<ref>{{cite web|title=Emma Isola|url=https://www.finnishdesignshop.com/Emma_Isola-d-441.html|publisher=Finnish Design Shop|accessdate=15 May 2017}}</ref>
Isola was described in 2013 as a style icon.<ref>{{cite web |last1=Azzarito|first1=Amy |title=Style Icon: Maija Isola |url=http://www.designsponge.com/2013/11/style-icon-maija-isola.html |publisher=Design Sponge |access-date=27 November 2015 |date=15 November 2013}}</ref> Her granddaughter Emma Isola works for Marimekko as a designer, forming a three-generation tradition.<ref>{{cite web|title=Emma Isola|url=https://www.finnishdesignshop.com/Emma_Isola-d-441.html|publisher=Finnish Design Shop|access-date=15 May 2017}}</ref>


==Exhibitions==
==Exhibitions==
Line 96: Line 101:
* ''[[Triennale]]'' Milan 1954, 1957{{sfn|Aav|2003|p=151}}
* ''[[Triennale]]'' Milan 1954, 1957{{sfn|Aav|2003|p=151}}
* World Exhibition Brussels ''Formes Scandinaves'' 1958{{sfn|Aav|2003|p=152}}
* World Exhibition Brussels ''Formes Scandinaves'' 1958{{sfn|Aav|2003|p=152}}
* [[Louvre]], Paris ''Finlandia''


===Retrospective===
===Retrospective===
Line 112: Line 116:


==Bibliography==
==Bibliography==
* {{cite book |last=Aav |first=Marianne |title=Marimekko: Fabrics, Fashion, Architecture |publisher=Yale University Press |date=2003 |isbn=978-0-300-10183-6 |ref=harv}}
* {{cite book |last=Aav |first=Marianne |title=Marimekko: Fabrics, Fashion, Architecture |publisher=Yale University Press |date=2003 |isbn=978-0-300-10183-6 }}
* {{cite book |last=Fiell |first=Charlotte and Peter |title=Design of the 20th Century |publisher=[[Taschen]] |date=2001 |isbn=3-8228-5542-1 }}
* {{cite book |last=Fiell |first=Charlotte and Peter |title=Design of the 20th Century |publisher=[[Taschen]] |date=2001 |isbn=3-8228-5542-1 |ref=none}}
* {{cite book |last=Fogg |first=Marnie |title=1960s Fashion Print: A Sourcebook |publisher=Batsford |date=2008 |isbn=978-0-7134-9054-1}} ''(6 page-sized illustrations of Isola's prints)''
* {{cite book |last=Fogg |first=Marnie |title=1960s Fashion Print: A Sourcebook |publisher=Batsford |date=2008 |isbn=978-0-7134-9054-1 |ref=none}} ''(6 page-sized illustrations of Isola's prints)''
* {{cite book |last=Isola |first=Kristina |title=Maija Isola: Life, Art, Marimekko |publisher=Design Museo |date=2005 |isbn=978-952-9878-42-0}}
* {{cite book |last=Isola |first=Kristina |title=Maija Isola: Life, Art, Marimekko |publisher=Design Museo |date=2005 |isbn=978-952-9878-42-0 |ref=none}}
* {{cite book |last=Jackson |first=Lesley |title=Twentieth Century Pattern Design |publisher=Princeton Architectural Press |date=2007 |isbn=978-1-56898-712-5 |ref=harv}}
* {{cite book |last=Jackson |first=Lesley |title=Twentieth Century Pattern Design |publisher=Princeton Architectural Press |date=2007 |isbn=978-1-56898-712-5 }}
* {{cite book |last=Shimatsuka |first=Eri |title=Maija Isola: Art, Fabric, Marimekko: the Story of a Legendary Designer of Marimekko |year=2012 |publisher=PIE International |isbn=978-4-7562-4366-9 |ref=harv}}
* {{cite book |last=Shimatsuka |first=Eri |title=Maija Isola: Art, Fabric, Marimekko: the Story of a Legendary Designer of Marimekko |year=2012 |publisher=PIE International |isbn=978-4-7562-4366-9 }}


==External links==
==External links==
{{commons}}
* [https://www.kansallisbiografia.fi/english/person/8543 Maija Isola] at National Biography of Finland.
* [https://web.archive.org/web/20120424031619/http://www.marimekko.com/who-we-are/designers/maija-isola Maija Isola] Profile on Marimekko.com
* [https://web.archive.org/web/20120424031619/http://www.marimekko.com/who-we-are/designers/maija-isola Maija Isola] Profile on Marimekko.com
* [http://www.finnishdesign.com/finnish-designers/maija-isola Maija Isola] Profile and images on FinnishDesign.com
* [http://www.finnishdesign.com/finnish-designers/maija-isola Maija Isola] Profile and images on FinnishDesign.com
* [http://www.scandinaviandesigncenter.com/Designers/gbp1/8010&currencychanged=1 Maija Isola] Profile at Scandinavian Design Center
*[https://www.nordicnest.com/designers/maija-isola/ Maija Isola] Profile at Nordic Nest
* [http://belovedlinens.net/textdesign/Maija_isola.html Maija Isola] – profile on BelovedLinens.net
* [http://belovedlinens.net/textdesign/Maija_isola.html Maija Isola] – profile on BelovedLinens.net
* [http://www.scandinaviandesign.com/designmuseo/0505/index.htm DesignMuseet] – exhibition at Scandinavian Design Museum
* [http://www.scandinaviandesign.com/designmuseo/0505/index.htm DesignMuseet] – exhibition at Scandinavian Design Museum
* [http://www.finnstyle.com/marimekko-maija-isola.html Finn Style] – profile on FinnStyle.com
* [http://www.finnstyle.com/marimekko-maija-isola.html Finn Style] – profile on FinnStyle.com
* [http://www.artic.edu/aic/collections/artwork/artist/1178 Maija Isola] – The Art Institute of Chicago
*[https://www.artic.edu/artists/12523 Maija Isola] – The Art Institute of Chicago
* [https://www.flickr.com/photos/jyri/29908854/ Flickr] – Maija Isola exhibition
* [https://www.flickr.com/photos/jyri/29908854/ Flickr] – Maija Isola exhibition


{{Textile designers}}
{{Textile designers}}
{{Authority control}}
{{Authority control (arts)}}


{{DEFAULTSORT:Isola, Maija}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Isola, Maija}}
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[[Category:Finnish designers]]
[[Category:Finnish designers]]
[[Category:Textile designers]]
[[Category:Textile designers]]
[[Category:Finnish fashion designers]]
[[Category:Finnish women fashion designers]]

Latest revision as of 13:03, 14 October 2023

Maija Isola
At work, sitting cross-legged, paintbrush and paintpot in hand
Born(1927-03-15)15 March 1927
Died3 March 2001(2001-03-03) (aged 73)
NationalityFinnish
OccupationTextile designer
Known forUnikko and other Marimekko patterns
Spouses
  • Georg Leander
  • Jaakko Somersalo
  • Jorma Tissari

Maija Sofia Isola (15 March 1927 – 3 March 2001) was a Finnish designer of printed textiles, and the creator of over 500 patterns, including Unikko ("Poppy"). The bold, colourful prints she created as the head designer of Marimekko made the Finnish company famous in the 1960s. She also had a successful career as a visual artist.[2]

Undisputedly the most famous textile designer... at Marimekko[3]

Isola exhibited across Europe, including at the Brussels World Fair and the Milan Triennale, and in the USA. Retrospectives of her work have been held at the Design Museum in Helsinki, the Victoria and Albert Museum, London, the Design Museum, Copenhagen, the Slovene Ethnographic Museum, Ljubljana, and the Minneapolis Institute of Arts. Products featuring her prints are still being sold at Marimekko.

She lived and worked in Finland for most of her life in, but spent some years in France, Algeria and the United States. She was married three times. Her daughter, Kristina Isola, also became a Marimekko designer, collaborating with her mother for some time. Her granddaughter, Emma, also designs for the company.

Biography[edit]

Early life[edit]

Isola was born to Mauno and Toini Isola, the youngest of their three daughters. Mauno was a farmer who wrote song lyrics, including a popular Finnish Christmas carol.[1] The girls lived on the family farm and helped out with agricultural work in the summer. They made paper dolls with elegant dresses for their homemade paper dollhouse, which had elaborately decorated interiors.[4]

Isola studied painting at the Helsinki Central School of Industrial Arts.[5] In 1945, as the Second World War came to an end, her life changed radically: her father died, and she became pregnant. On 22 July 1945 she married the commercial artist Georg Leander; their daughter Kristina was born in January 1946.[6]

In 1948, she went to Oslo, visiting the Van Gogh exhibition and seeing the Edvard Munch paintings there. She was inspired by a display of classical era pots at the Oslo Museum of Craft and Design to create her Amfora ("Amphora") print.[6] The marriage with Leander did not last long, and by 1949 she was travelling Europe with the painter Jaakko ("Jaska") Somersalo, who became her second husband. He taught her woodcut printing and inspired her to paint. They divorced in 1955.[7]

Marimekko[edit]

Marimekko dishes featuring Isola's 1964 Unikko poppy pattern.

Her student-era work, including Amfora, was spotted in 1949 by Marimekko's founder, Armi Ratia. [5][6] Ratia hired Isola to work for Printex, the forerunner of Marimekko.[8] She became the principal textile designer for Marimekko,[9] creating some eight to ten patterns every year.[5][10]

Between 1957 and 1963, Isola created her first series of works on a single theme, Luonto (Nature). It consisted of some 30 designs, based on pressed plants, which her daughter Kristina had started collecting at age 11.[11] In 1958, she began another series, Ornamentti (Ornament), based on Slavic folk art. It, too, included about 30 designs, and made her famous.[12]

In 1959 she married the judge Jorma Tissari. He was a wealthy art lover with a spacious home in the centre of Helsinki. When Isola wanted more creative freedom from Ratia's control, Tissari negotiated with Marimekko to give her a new contract that allowed her more creative freedom.[13]

Page from Isola's "Pattern Books", showing the hand-drawn construction of her 1968 textile pattern Lovelovelove and her handwritten annotations. The pattern books continued to serve as production manuals after her death.[14]

The collaboration between Isola and Ratia was an "unusual creative power game" characterised by "vitality and inventiveness"[15] rather than a harmonious understanding.[15] The tone for this was set when, in 1964, Isola "provocatively"[15] defied Ratia's professed hatred of floral patterns [15] by painting the famous Unikko (Poppy) pattern in bold pink, red and black on white;[16] the pattern came to define the brand and has been in production ever since.[17] It was one of some eight floral designs that Ratia chose from Isola's portfolio in that period.[18]

From 1965 to 1967, Isola worked on the theme of sun and sea, creating at least nine designs that were adopted by Marimekko, including Albatrossi (Albatross), Meduusa (Jellyfish), and Osteri (Oyster).[19] Her patterns were, by now, being widely reproduced. To facilitate this process and to keep the patterns accurate, Isola maintained a set of "pattern books". These were handwritten exercise books containing precise details of her pattern repeats. Each one, such as her 1968 Lovelovelove, was drawn to scale on a pattern book page, coloured, and annotated with the names of the colours to be used. The books also recorded the size of the actual repeat and details of print orders. The books continued to be used as production guides in the decades after her death.[14]

In 1970 she travelled on her own to Paris to get away from her marriage and family commitments. There, she had a love affair with the Egyptian scholar Ahmed Al-Haggagi. He encouraged her to work on Arabian patterns, sketching for her the basis of her Poppy (not the same as Unikko). Her Arabian-inspired patterns of this period include Kuningatar, Naamio, Sadunkertoja, Tumma, and Välly.[20] In 1971, she separated from Tissari, realising that she preferred to live alone.[21] She spent three years in Algeria, taking a lover named Muhamed.[22]

Tablecloth in Isola's 1974 Primavera pattern (with candleholders designed by Heikki Orvola)

In 1974, Isola designed the popular pattern Primavera, consisting of stylized Marigold flowers; this has since been printed in many different colours for tablecloths, plates and other items.[23] In 1976 she returned to Paris, working with Al-Haggagi on a series of Egyptian-inspired prints including Niili (Nile), Nubia, and Papyrus.[24] The next year, she accompanied Al-Haggagi to Boone, North Carolina where he was a lecturer. She spent the year painting, walking, and doing yoga, inspired by the scenery of the Appalachian Mountains, which she said reminded her of her home town, Riihimäki. She made some designs, but found it hard to sell any in the American market, as there were few factories that could print fabrics to her specifications.[25]

On returning to Finland, 160 of her works, including paintings and sketches but not her print designs, were displayed at a retrospective exhibition in a Helsinki gallery in 1979.[26]

From 1980 to 1987, Isola designed patterns for Marimekko jointly [26] with her daughter, Kristina. They worked in their own studios, in Helsinki in the winter, in Kaunismäki in the summer.[27] Kristina became one of Marimekko's chief designers;[28][29] she had joined Marimekko when she was 18.[30] During her 40-year career with Marimekko, Maija Isola created a "staggering"[31] 500 prints for the company.[31] Among the best-known are Kivet (Stones) and Kaivo (Well); they continue to sell in the 21st century.[32][33]

Retirement[edit]

From 1987, when she retired, Isola worked on painting rather than textiles, until her death on 3 March 2001.[29] Her designs, and Marimekko, went into eclipse. In 1991, the new head of Marimekko, Kirsti Paakkanen successfully relaunched Isola's Fandango,[34] but it was not until the late 1990s that Marimekko again became widely popular. Its renewed fortunes were based on "classic" Isola patterns from the 1950s and 1960s.[35]

Reception[edit]

The glowing colours and bold patterns in Marimekko owe much to Maija Isola's design and example. A roll of Unikko is second from the bottom of the fabric stand; a vertical roll of the black-and-white Joonas (Jonah) stands at the far left.

According to FinnStyle, Isola was "undisputedly the most famous textile designer to have existed at Marimekko",[3] and she "created over 500 prints during her long and colorful employment."[3] Her work enabled the company to become a world-leading international fashion trendsetter.[5]

Ivar Ekman, writing in the New York Times, quotes Marianne Aav, director of the Helsinki Design Museum: "What we understand as the Marimekko style is very much based on what Maija Isola was doing".[29] Ekman comments "The range of prints that Isola produced for Marimekko is astounding", as the patterns span "minimalist geometric", "toned-down naturalistic" and "explosion of colors".[29]

Marion Hume, writing in Time Magazine, explains that Isola "was able to mastermind an astonishing range, from the intricate and folkloric Ananas (1962)--which remains one of the most popular prints for the home market--to the radically simple, dramatically enlarged, asymmetrical Unikko poppy (1964), originally in red and in blue, which may be one of the most widely recognized prints on earth."[36]

According to Tamsin Blanchard, writing in The Observer, "The designs of Maija Isola – one of the company's [most] original and longest-standing designers - have stood the test of time."[37] Blanchard describes Isola's 1972 Wind design "with its feathery organic tree skeletons in silhouette" as "timeless", her 1957 Putinotko as a "spiky black-and-white print", also discussing her 1963 work, Melon, and her 1956 work, Stones.[37]

Hannah Booth, writing in The Guardian, explains that Marimekko's founder, Armi Ratia, "recruited Maija Isola, the first and most important of many young female designers, to create original prints".[38] She describes Isola as unconventional, leaving her daughter Kristina "to grow up with her grandmother so she could travel the world to find inspiration for her textiles".[38] Booth quotes Finnish novelist Kaari Utrio as saying Isola was "a dangerously original character"; she "belonged to a trailblazing generation" which enabled young women to move freely into the arts.[38]

Lesley Jackson, in a chapter titled Op, Pop, and Psychedelia, writes that "from Finland the exuberant all-conquering Marimekko burst on to the international scene" in the 1960s; she illustrates this with one pattern by Vuokko Nurmesniemi, and three by Isola – Lokki, Melooni, and Unikko.[39][a] Of Lokki, Jackson writes "Isola revolutionized design with her simple, bold, flat patterns, printed on a dramatic scale. The design, whose title means 'seagull', evokes the lapping of waves and the flapping of birds' wings."[40] Of the famous Unikko, Jackson says "This huge, exploded poppy pattern embodies the unbridled design confidence of the mid-1960s, and presages the ebullience and sizzling colours of the flower power era."[40]

Hanna-Liisa Ylipoti notes that "The themes of many Marimekko designs are also very Finnish, portraying Finnish nature. For example, Maija Isola created her Luonto (Nature) design [series] using actual plant specimens".[41]

Legacy[edit]

A Finnair Airbus A340-300 flies painted with Isola's 'Marimekko Unikko' pattern in 2015.

Aav noted that "As the twenty-first century gets underway, Marimekko is experiencing a resurgence of interest and appreciation—a true revival. Maija Isola's Unikko pattern, designed almost forty years ago, blooms as never before."[42]

In 2011, Marimekko flew a hot-air balloon decorated with an enormous version of Unikko over Helsinki, reflecting the iconic status of the print, nearly half a century later.[43] Marimekko's marketing policy is to reissue "classics from its fifty-year back catalogue, notably a large group of patterns from the 1950s and 1960s by Maija Isola."[28]

Since 2012, Finland's airline Finnair has been flying an Airbus A340-300 to its Asia destinations sporting a blue Unikko print, while an Airbus A330 painted in an Anniversary Unikko has been serving its other intercontinental routes.[44]

Isola was described in 2013 as a style icon.[45] Her granddaughter Emma Isola works for Marimekko as a designer, forming a three-generation tradition.[46]

Exhibitions[edit]

Contemporary[edit]

  • Design in Scandinavia, USA 1954,[15] 1960
  • Finnish Exhibition in Germany 1956
  • Triennale Milan 1954, 1957[15]
  • World Exhibition Brussels Formes Scandinaves 1958[47]

Retrospective[edit]

Notes[edit]

  1. ^ Among the best-known of the roughly 500 patterns that Isola designed, other than those already mentioned, are Primavera (Spring), Seireeni, Joonas, Tulipunainen (Tulips), Verso, Viitta, Hevosvaras, Bambu (Bamboo), Appelsiini (Oranges), Tuuli, Niili, Pariisin portit, Pepe, Tantsu, Satula, and Vaarallinen Planeetta.

References[edit]

  1. ^ a b Shimatsuka 2012, p. 18.
  2. ^ "Maija Isola". Marimekko. Archived from the original on 16 March 2010. Retrieved 5 March 2010.
  3. ^ a b c "FinnStyle:Maija Isola". Finnish Designers: Maija Isola. FinnStyle. Retrieved October 18, 2011.
  4. ^ Shimatsuka 2012, pp. 20–22.
  5. ^ a b c d Aav 2003, p. 150.
  6. ^ a b c Shimatsuka 2012, p. 25.
  7. ^ Shimatsuka 2012, p. 29.
  8. ^ "Maija Isola". Finnish Desigh. Retrieved 24 April 2017.
  9. ^ "Maija Isola patterns for Marimekko". Design Finland. 31 August 2006. Retrieved 5 March 2010.
  10. ^ Byars, Mel (2004). "Isola, Maija (1927–2001)". The design encyclopedia. Laurence King. ISBN 9781856693493.
  11. ^ Shimatsuka 2012, p. 31.
  12. ^ Shimatsuka 2012, p. 46.
  13. ^ Shimatsuka 2012, p. 54.
  14. ^ a b Shimatsuka 2012, p. 89.
  15. ^ a b c d e f Aav 2003, p. 151.
  16. ^ "Marimekko Timeline". Timeline. Marimekko.com. Archived from the original on 27 October 2011. Retrieved 18 October 2011.
  17. ^ Kueber, Pam (17 October 2010). "RetroRenovation: Marimekko Unikko". Marimekko Unikko by Maija Isola, 1964. Retro Renovation. Retrieved 18 October 2011.
  18. ^ Shimatsuka 2012, p. 64.
  19. ^ Shimatsuka 2012, p. 72.
  20. ^ Shimatsuka 2012, p. 102.
  21. ^ Shimatsuka 2012, p. 87.
  22. ^ Shimatsuka 2012, p. 107.
  23. ^ "Primavera". Archived from the original on 9 August 2015. Retrieved 18 October 2011.
  24. ^ Shimatsuka 2012, p. 114.
  25. ^ Shimatsuka 2012, p. 136.
  26. ^ a b Shimatsuka 2012, p. 140.
  27. ^ Shimatsuka 2012, p. 146.
  28. ^ a b Jackson 2007, p. 200.
  29. ^ a b c d Ekman, Ivar (23 August 2005). "New York Times". Nostalgia for a modern Finnish designer. New York Times. Retrieved October 18, 2011.
  30. ^ "Maija & Kristina Isola". FinnStyle. Retrieved 27 November 2015.
  31. ^ a b "Maija Isola: art, fabric, Marimekko". Perimeter Books. Archived from the original on 8 December 2015. Retrieved 27 November 2015.
  32. ^ "Maija Isola". Marimekko. Archived from the original on 24 April 2012. Retrieved 24 April 2017.
  33. ^ Suhonen, Pekko (1986). Phenomenon Marimekko. Marimekko Oy. p. 35. ISBN 9789513538682.
  34. ^ Shimatsuka 2012, p. 148.
  35. ^ Shimatsuka 2012, p. 150.
  36. ^ Hume, Marion (April 9, 2008). "Time Magazine". Luxury Source. Time Magazine. Archived from the original on April 17, 2008. Retrieved 23 October 2011.
  37. ^ a b Blanchard, Tamsin (20 May 2001). "The Observer". Interiors:Marimekko:The Finnish Line. The Guardian. Retrieved 18 October 2011.
  38. ^ a b c Booth, Hannah (5 September 2005). "The Guardian: Life & Style: Women". Flower power. The Guardian. Retrieved 18 October 2011.
  39. ^ Jackson 2007, pp. 136–137.
  40. ^ a b Jackson 2007, p. 136.
  41. ^ Ylipoti, Hanna-Liisa (3 February 2011). "Research". Marimekko's Path to Success During the 1950s and 60s. FAST-FIN-1 (TRENAK1) Finnish Institutions Research Paper. Archived from the original on 2 April 2012. Retrieved 23 October 2011.
  42. ^ Aav 2003, p. 149.
  43. ^ "Unikko hot-air balloon". Marimekko Unikko hot-air balloon flying above the silhouette of Helsinki. Marimekko. 22 June 2011. Retrieved October 18, 2011.[dead YouTube link]
  44. ^ "Finnair and Marimekko's design collaboration". Finnair. Retrieved 24 April 2017.
  45. ^ Azzarito, Amy (15 November 2013). "Style Icon: Maija Isola". Design Sponge. Retrieved 27 November 2015.
  46. ^ "Emma Isola". Finnish Design Shop. Retrieved 15 May 2017.
  47. ^ Aav 2003, p. 152.
  48. ^ Retrospective exhibition at Designmuseo
  49. ^ Blueprint, Issues 232–234. Wordsearch. 2005. p. 87.
  50. ^ Exhibition at Design Museum, Copenhagen, Denmark Archived 2012-04-15 at the Wayback Machine
  51. ^ Exhibition Marimekko at Sem in Ljubljana
  52. ^ Exhibition at Minneapolis Institute of Arts

Bibliography[edit]

  • Aav, Marianne (2003). Marimekko: Fabrics, Fashion, Architecture. Yale University Press. ISBN 978-0-300-10183-6.
  • Fiell, Charlotte and Peter (2001). Design of the 20th Century. Taschen. ISBN 3-8228-5542-1.
  • Fogg, Marnie (2008). 1960s Fashion Print: A Sourcebook. Batsford. ISBN 978-0-7134-9054-1. (6 page-sized illustrations of Isola's prints)
  • Isola, Kristina (2005). Maija Isola: Life, Art, Marimekko. Design Museo. ISBN 978-952-9878-42-0.
  • Jackson, Lesley (2007). Twentieth Century Pattern Design. Princeton Architectural Press. ISBN 978-1-56898-712-5.
  • Shimatsuka, Eri (2012). Maija Isola: Art, Fabric, Marimekko: the Story of a Legendary Designer of Marimekko. PIE International. ISBN 978-4-7562-4366-9.

External links[edit]